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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Sharn Panesar Ltd v Pistachios In The Park Ltd & Anor [2020] EWHC 194 (QB) (07 February 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2020/194.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 194 (QB) |
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Appeal Ref: AB/2018/0322 |
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ON APPEAL FROM THE COUNTY COURT AT CENTRAL LONDON
ORDER OF HHJ SAGGERSON DATED 23 OCTOBER 2018
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) SHARN PANESAR LIMITED |
Appellants/ |
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(2) SHARN PANESAR |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) PISTACHIOS IN THE PARK LIMITED |
Respondents/ |
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(2) AYSIN DJEMIL |
Defendants |
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Mr David Sawtell (instructed by Oracle Solicitors) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 30 July 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Murray :
The claim and the parties
Background
Procedural history
"Scope of trial
10. The trial directed herein (the 'Phase One Trial') will be limited to the following issues:
10.1. What information was provided to the Second Claimant:
10.1.1. At the meeting at the Harvester on 26 September 2011; and
10.1.2. At the opening of the Second Claimant's sister'[s] café?
10.2. Was Mr Whitton the Second Claimant's agent?
10.3. Is Mr Whitton's knowledge to be imputed to the Claimants?
10.4. What information was provided, by the Defendants, to Mr Whitton?"
"AND UPON the Defendants (a) averring through counsel that the 2009 projections were accurate when they were produced but (b) admitting through counsel that the said projections were no longer accurate, could not reasonably be regarded as accurate, and were known by the Defendants no longer to be accurate in August/September 2011."
"On the trial of 'Phase One' of this action and on hearing Counsel for the Claimants and for Defendants; and on findings of fact being determined by the Phase 1 trial judge …"
i) an order varying the Order to make it clear that the only binding findings of fact for purposes of the second phase of the trial were those addressing the Preliminary Issues; and
ii) that the Judge recuse himself from further involvement in the claim on the basis that, the Judge having made findings outside the scope of the Preliminary Issues when it was inappropriate to do so, it would be unfair for the appellants to have to try to persuade him as the trial judge that he was wrong in relation to those other findings.
"I do not think that para 2 of HHJ Saggerson's Order dated 30th May 2019 addresses either the Claimants' concerns or those reflected in para 2 of Mr Justice Julian Knowles' Order dated 24 January 2019. It does not confine the findings of fact to the Phase 1 issues. I therefore grant permission to appeal.
The Respondents should consider whether the better course is simply to agree that HHJ Saggerson's findings of fact are limited to the Phase 1 issues. This would enable the litigation to move forward to the next phase, to be heard before a different judge."
The Judgment and the Order
"… even at the point in time when the witnesses are recording in writing what they want to say by way of evidence, the events that they are talking about are to a great extent lost in the mists of time. That means that recollection on all sides is bound to be clouded on several if not many issues. "
i) that the document was only intended as a "template" (whereas the appellants argue that it was a business plan sent by the respondents with false financial projections), as evidenced by the following passage from para 56 of the Judgment:
"Mr Wickham [by sending the document] was intending to imply: 'Look, use this document as an example. This is a sort of a foundation for you to work with, and you are going to have to change the biographical details of course'. He highlighted them in order for that to be done. What was not intended with the transmission of this template was that the biography should be changed and the whole of the rest of the document used as the basis either for submission of the business plan to somebody else, or the basis of Mr Panesar's decision-making as to the purchase of this franchisee [sic]"; and
ii) that Mr Panesar was wrong to interpret the business plan as essentially complete save for the biography section, which Mr Wickham had highlighted in yellow, the judge referring to this as Mr Panesar's "misinterpretation" in para 57 of the Judgment;
"62. Therefore, turning to the list of issues, dealing with those in turn[:]
[i)] question one, as formulated in the revised list, 'What information was provided to Sharn Panesar, (1)(i) at the opening of [his] sister Ranjeet Panesar's café on 10 September 2011? In particular, did Aysin Djemil or Adrian Wickham provide a printed copy of a franchise prospectus showing, among other things, projected income of £150,000 in year one?'. The answer to that is yes.
[ii)] '(1)(ii) At the meeting at the Harvester, or Toddington Services on 26 September, in particular, did Aysin Djemil or Adrian Wickham provide a printed copy of a franchise prospectus showing, among other things, projected income of £150,000 in year one?'. The answer to that question is 'yes'.
'The trading figures of the Frimley Lodge café, including its turnover figures, current sales for the month, monthly sales for the café and total sales to September 2011 on the PX Portal via Aysin Djemil's iPad or iPhone?'. The answer to that question is mixed. I do not consider it important as to whether all this information was shown on an electronic device. The probability is that not all of it was shown on the electronic device, but I am satisfied that in the course of prolonged discussions, all of this information was given to Mr Panesar in the course of detailed discussion between himself, Mr Djemil and ultimately, when he arrived, Mr Wickham.
The next part is, 'Oral information that the council had told the defendants that the Frimley Lodge café had turned over approximately £80,000 when it was run by Veolia?'. The answer to that question is 'yes'."
i) "Mr Vear wrote a business plan for his franchise" (para 16 of the Judgment);
ii) (A) as a matter of inherent probability there was "no benefit whatsoever" in the respondents being anything other than "realistic" in their financial projections shared with Mr Panesar, (B) the respondents had nothing to gain from painting a false picture to induce him to enter into the franchise agreement and (C) misleading a franchisee was a "recipe for catastrophe", namely, that the franchise would not function in the way the franchisee hoped, would do badly and, as a consequence, negatively affect the franchise (para 48 of the Judgment); and
iii) between the execution of the franchise agreement in on 23 November 2011 in relation to the Frimley Park Lodge café and the termination of the franchise agreement on 24 November 2014 the appellants did not raise any concerns about the basis on which they had been induced to enter into the franchise agreement (para 7 of the Judgment) and Mr Panesar had "not … thought about financial misinformation for the entire duration he was operating this franchise" (para 47 of the Judgment).
Grounds of appeal
i) the Judge wrongly failed to confine his factual findings to the Preliminary Issues;
ii) the Judge wrongly made or purported to make findings on issues outside the Preliminary Issues;
iii) the Judge wrongly made or purported to make findings on issues that the parties had not presented their cases on;
iv) the Order involved a serious irregularity, namely, that the parties had limited their evidence and submission to the Preliminary Issues, whereas the Judge included other issues in the Judgment, which caused the Order to be unjust;
v) by making findings of fact on matters that were not before the court, the Judge made irrational and/or perverse findings of fact; and
vi) the Judge was wrong in law and/or made irrational and/or perverse findings of fact.
Discussion and analysis
"As the Labrouche case makes clear, the denial to a party of any opportunity to make submissions in support (or defence) of its case is a fundamental denial of procedural justice in its own right, regardless of the consequences."
"14. The approach of the court to any particular case will depend upon the nature of the issues kind of case determined by the judge. …
15. In appeals against conclusions of primary fact the approach of an appellate court will depend upon the weight to be attached to the findings of the judge and that weight will depend upon the extent to which, as the trial judge, the judge has an advantage over the appellate court; the greater that advantage the more reluctant the appellate court should be to interfere. …"
i) the meeting on 26 September 2011 took place at Toddington Services (para 23 of the Judgment);
ii) at the launch of Ms Ranjeet Panesar's PITP café on Palewell Common on 10 September 2011, Mr Panesar was provided with a copy of an updated prospectus which was invoiced by the printers in August 2011 (para 30 of the Judgment);
iii) at the meeting on 26 September 2011, Mr Djemil orally explained in detail to Mr Panesar the broader overall picture of the franchise business, including describing the turnover as it was understood to have been when the Frimley Park Lodge café was operated by Veolia prior to PITPL acquiring the right to operate it in February 2011, namely, that the turnover was in the order of £80,000 per annum and that in the period between February 2011 and the termination of the PITP franchise agreement with Foodelicious Limited, the turnover was in the order of £116,000 (para 44 of the Judgment); and
iv) Mr Panesar was provided with full access to the PX Portal by Christmas 2011, but not on 10 October 2011 (para 64 of the Judgment).
"… whether the determination of a preliminary issue may unreasonably fetter either or both parties or, indeed, the court, in achieving a just result which is, of course, at the end of the day what is required of the court at the trial."
"[This appeal] represents yet another cautionary tale about the dangers of preliminary issues. In particular, it demonstrates that (i) while often attractive prospectively, the siren song of agreeing or ordering preliminary issues should normally be resisted, (ii) if there are none the less to be preliminary issues, it is vital that the issues themselves, and the agreed facts or assumptions on which they are based, are simply, clearly and precisely formulated, and (iii) once formulated, the issues should be answered in a clear and precise way."
Conclusion